Chelan County Released Inmates Lookup

Chelan County released inmates can be traced through a mix of state custody tools, court records, and county office pages. That matters because the release trail is rarely one note. A person may appear in a DOC search, a clerk file, a sheriff notice, or a public records response, depending on where the case sat and how it ended. If you want the cleanest path, start with the current custody record, then move into the county clerk and court directory when you need the papers that explain how the release happened. The page below keeps those steps tied to Chelan County instead of turning the search into a generic state lookup.

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Chelan County Overview

DOC State custody search
Clerk Court records
VINE Release alerts
42.56 Public records law

Chelan County Released Inmates Search

The Washington DOC Incarcerated Search at doc.wa.gov/records/incarcerated-data-search/incarcerated-search is the core tool for Chelan County released inmates who were held under state jurisdiction. The search returns the person's name, DOC number, current facility, and earliest possible release date. That makes it a strong first screen when you need to know whether someone is still in state custody or whether the release has already moved them into supervision or a different record path. The search also accepts a name or DOC number, and the site warns that special characters, other than hyphens and apostrophes, cannot be used.

That detail is easy to miss, but it saves time. If a record does not show up, try the full legal name again before you move to court files or a records request. The DOC page also says the public may contact the agency to learn more about current and former incarcerated individuals and supervisees. That is useful when a person has been released but still has a traceable state record. For older release history, a DOC public records request may give you more detail than the public search does on its own.

When you search Chelan County released inmates, these are the main pieces that help most:

  • Full name with the exact spelling used in the record
  • DOC number if you already have a case file or notice
  • Current state facility or last known custody point
  • Earliest possible release date shown in DOC

Chelan County Released Inmates Image

The county home page at co.chelan.wa.us is the source for this Chelan County image and is a useful place to start when you want the county's own office links before you drill into a release record.

Chelan County Released Inmates county official website

Chelan County uses its main site for announcements, local office paths, and public updates, so it works well as the county-level anchor for a released inmate search.

Chelan County Released Inmates and Sheriff

The Chelan County Sheriff page at co.chelan.wa.us/sheriff is another useful source because it shows the office that handles police service in the unincorporated county, along with notices, archive material, and current public updates. That can matter when you are trying to match a release record to a county event or to a sheriff notice that helped create the case trail. The sheriff page also shows that the office is responsible for patrol, criminal investigation, and emergency response in unincorporated Chelan County, which gives you a clear local contact point when the record you need is not in DOC.

Chelan County Released Inmates sheriff page

When a release or arrest record seems thin, the sheriff page is a practical place to look for the county side of the story. It can give you the office context that turns a name into a local file path.

Chelan County Released Inmates and Clerk

The Chelan County Clerk page at co.chelan.wa.us/clerk is where the court-side trail becomes real. The clerk says it receives, processes, and preserves the documents presented in Superior Court, and it keeps the official case record, minutes, exhibits, and status information unless a case is sealed. That matters for released inmates because the court file can explain the sentence, the release order, or the later motion that changed the record. The page also points to State v. Blake motions for vacation and resentencing, which shows how a criminal file can stay active long after the person leaves custody.

Chelan County Released Inmates clerk page

The clerk page lists weekday hours and appointment language, so it is wise to check the site or call before you go in person. If the case is not sealed, the clerk can often tell you whether the file exists and how to ask for a copy.

Chelan County Released Inmates Records

Washington law gives you a clear split between the public jail register and the deeper jail file. Under RCW 70.48.100, the jail register is open to the public and must show the name of each person confined in jail, along with the time, date, and cause of confinement, and the time, date, and manner of discharge. The same statute also says the rest of the jail record is held in confidence except for listed uses or permission from the person. That is why one request may show a release date while another stops at a brief register line.

The Public Records Act at RCW 42.56 is the next tool when the public search is not enough. Agencies must respond within five business days, and they can give you the record, a link, an estimated response time, or a denial with the specific exemption. The statute also limits charges for inspection and electronic access. If the matter turns on conviction history, RCW 10.97.030 matters too, because conviction data is treated differently from non-conviction data. That difference can shape what shows up in a release trail and what stays with criminal justice agencies only.

The state courts directory at courts.wa.gov/court_dir/?fa=court_dir.county helps you find the right clerk when a criminal case moved through the courts, and the general courts page at courts.wa.gov gives you broader access to forms and court system links. If you need a records denial review path, the Attorney General public records page at atg.wa.gov/our-work/public-records explains the state guidance and challenge route. Those pages are the cleanest backup when the county file is incomplete.

Chelan County Released Inmates and VINE

VINE at vinelink.com/#/state/WA is the practical alert tool for Chelan County released inmates. It is free, anonymous, and built for custody changes. Users can register by phone or email and get notices when a person is released, transferred, escapes, or dies. Because it covers most county jails and the Washington DOC, it bridges the county and state side of the record trail. That is useful if you are watching for a release after sentencing or trying to confirm that a custody change really happened.

DOC says the same thing in different language. It publishes current and historical incarcerated data, and it tells the public to use VINE for custody status changes and the DOC public records channel for older release and supervision information. The pair works well together. VINE gives you a live alert. DOC gives you the file trail. When the two disagree, the court clerk or public records officer is usually the best next stop. That keeps the search tied to the record and not to guesswork.

For records questions that stay open after a release, the DOC contact page at doc.wa.gov/about-us/contact-us points you to the public records officer and the central records function in Tumwater. The WSP contact page at wsp.wa.gov/about-wsp/contact/ is the right place if you need help with a criminal history record or a record challenge.

Chelan County Released Inmates Review

For a broader record review, the Washington State Patrol criminal history page at wsp.wa.gov/crime/criminal-history/ explains that the public can request a criminal history report online, by mail, or in person. The page also says conviction information is available to the public while non-conviction data is restricted. That distinction matters when you want to know whether a release record should appear in a public file or whether it stays in a limited state record set. It is also the cleanest way to separate a real release entry from a rumor or a partial hit.

The Washington State Patrol also notes that fingerprint-based record review exists, and the public can challenge a criminal history record if it needs correction. If you run into a mismatch, that is the point where a formal request beats another broad search. The courts, DOC, and WSP each hold a piece of the story. Put them together and the release trail becomes much easier to follow. You do not need a huge request. You need the right one.

Note: Chelan County released inmate searches work best when you start with DOC, then move to the clerk and sheriff pages only as the record trail gets narrower.

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